A view of London through spring blossom from Alexandra Palace, north London.
Spring Blossom from Alexandra Palace| Photograph: Adrian Snood
Spring Blossom from Alexandra Palace| Photograph: Adrian Snood

Things to do in London this weekend

Can’t decide what to do with your two delicious days off? This is how to fill them up

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It’s the first proper weekend of June, which means we can start filling up our sweet days off with all those things we love about summer in London: beer garden hangs, alfresco dining, picnics in the park, open-air theatre and cinema and lido visits are on the horizon – (just keep your fingers crossed for good weather). To ease us into the new season, London’s ever-inventive events organisers have put on a smorgasbord of things to do in the capital. 

This weekend look out for the inaugural SXSW London, the famous Austin music, film and media festival is coming to the capital with plenty of talks, panels, film screenings and music across a whole host of venues. There’s also brilliant theatre on the cards as Breach Theatre’s verbatim musical ‘After the Act’ about the heinous ’80s legislation Section 28 has its funniest and sharpest run at the Royal Court Theatre. Plus, party with Massive Attack and Jamie XX at at brand new Vicky Park fest Lido Festival

On top of that, there’s also some annual big hitters to mark in your diary this year, including the ever-brilliant Lambeth Country Show, London Open Gardens weekend giving you the chance to mosey around some of the city’s secret green spaces and The Great Exhibition Road Festival where some of the most illustrious museums in London will be entertaining punters with live experiments, immersive installations and talks. What are you waiting for? 

Start planning: here’s our roundup of the 25 best things to do in London in 2025

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What’s on this weekend?

  • Drama
  • Richmond
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

The Orange Tree’s new production is Terence Rattigan’s penultimate play In Praise of Love and Amelia Sears’s revival is exquisite. Its protagonists are Sebastian Cruttwell (Dominic Rowan) – champagne socialist manchild and superstar book critic – and his Estonian wife Lydia (Claire Price). As an intelligence officer in postwar Berlin, Sebastian married Lydia to get her out from behind the Iron Curtain, with little expectation that they’d stay together. But they have, rubbing along eccentrically for 25 years. It plays out as a melancholy farce: Lydia has discovered she’s dying, and doesn’t want to tell Sebastian, reasoning he’s too hapless to be able to cope with it. It’s an elegant elegy for Rattigan’s own war-time generation.

  • Music
  • Music festivals
  • Victoria Park

Vicky Park is welcoming a brand new festival. Lido festival will take place in the Tower Hamlets park’s Lido Field with Northern hardcore festival Outbreak hosting a residency to open the second weekend, with Turnstile, Alex G and Danny Brown on the bill. On Saturday, it’ll be throwing it back to Brat summer, with a headline set from Charli xcx as part of the pop icon’s Partygirl night, featuring appearances from 070 Shake, A.G. Cook, Kelly Lee Owens, The Dare and The Japanese House. And on Sunday London Grammar will bring their ethereal sounds to east London, alongside Celeste, Róisín Murphy and The Blessed Madonna.

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  • Contemporary European
  • Camberwell
  • price 2 of 4
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended
Hello JoJo has joined the gastronomical strip that is Camberwell’s Church Street. Bakery by day, and serving seasonal plates bith small and large in the evening, the place is rammed on a weekend and filled with heady conviviality, helped no-end by £6 glasses of house wine. There’s something faintly medieval about the food here, fried potato and smoked cheese dumplings in a buttermilk sauce are butch yet fluttery, a platter of creamy, flawlessly flakey hake comes with a swirl of coastal greens and a cider beurre blanc so brilliantly buttery that it might as well have you licking a slab of Kerrygold. This is hearty food that wears its heft lightly. Welcome to the neighborhood.
  • Film
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

A sun-soaked dream – okay, nightmare – of a midnight movie, this Australian survival horror asks the question: what if Steve Irwin was basically the devil? The answer would probably look like Jai Courtney’s shark dive owner Tucker, a brawny bogan who takes tourists onto his rusty old boat to introduce them to the bull sharks, makos and great whites that swim off the Gold Coast. First in a cage, then sedated and trapped into a harness, lowered into the water while the sweaty psychopath records it all on his VHS camera. The movie’s two heroes are American hippie-chick surfer Zephyr (Hassie Harrison) and hunky local softboi Moses (Josh Heuston) who are likeable enough for you to hope they don’t end up chomped on by a peckish mako. It takes a steady hand to pull off a horror film as outlandish as thisbut Byrne has pulled off something slick and confident here. 

Dangerous Animals premiered at the Cannes Film Festival. It’s in US and UK cinemas Jun 6, and Australian cinemas Jun 12. 

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  • Music
  • Music festivals
  • South Bank

The Southbank Centre’s Meltdown Festival has long since established itself as a key date in London’s cultural calendar. Each year, the Southbank invites one celebrated artist to curate the festival. This year it’s the turn of Mercury Prize-winning rapper, Top Boy actor and previous Time Out cover star Little Simz. She’s promising a boundary-pushing line-up for the eleven day festival, featuring plenty of local organisations and grassroots collectives, plus the one-of-a-kind performances that have characterised Meltdown over the years. As usual, it’ll culminate in a headline show from the Brit Award-winner herself. 

  • Shakespeare
  • Tower Bridge
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Nicholas Hytner’s exuberant 2019 take on A Midsummer Night’s Dream was simply too much fun to leave to the history books: what a joy it is to have it back. It is joyously queer: pretty much everyone in it gets a crack at snogging everybody else. And Hytner’s key textual intervention is swapping the bulk of fairy monarchs Oberon and Titania’s lines, meaning that it’s JJ Feild’s Oberon – not Susannah Fielding’s Titania – who has it off with Emmanuel Akwafo’s exuberant Bottom. The new actors are also bloody great and the show remains a hoot. It’s a production that just pelts you with cool stuff for three hours and wins your heart.

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  • Things to do
  • Literary events
  • St Paul’s

This literary festival focuses on one of our era’s most exciting genres: crime. Now firmly part of London’s literary calendar, each year it hosts a top-notch line-up of crime and thriller authors in a rich programme of talks, panels and interviews. Over 80 authors and specialists will explore themes such as ‘unlikeable characters’, how to bring crimes to the silver screen and Agatha Christie for the Knives Out generation. Notable names appearing this year include Michael Connelly, Steph McGovern, Jeremy Vine, Vaseem Khan, Linwood Barclay, Karin Slaughter, Richard Armitage, Dorothy Koomson and Ruth Ware. The festival runs throughout the weekend, but if you're only keen to see one of the acts, you can grab tickets for individual talks for £20.  

  • Things to do
  • Bloomsbury

Get to know the surprising queer histories behind some of the art and artefacts in the British Museum’s vast collection on this free tour of the iconic institution. Led by a knowledgeable volunteer, the 70-minute tour takes in a huge variety of objects ranging from the ancient world to the present day, illuminating the fascinating stories behind some of the musum’s most famous artefacts and lesser-known gems, including the Townley Diskobolos, the Gilgamesh Tablet and the Warren Cup. Can’t make it to one of these dates? There’s also a self-guided version of the tour with free audio commentary you can access through your preferred streaming platform. 

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  • Musicals
  • Barbican
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Director Jordan Fein’s superb take on 1964’s Fiddler on the Roof – a transfer from Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre – manages to find its own, brilliantly idiosyncratic balance. The tone here is, for the most part, drolly surreal, a dark clown show underpinning everything from the gags to the choreography (by Julia Cheng) to Fein’s penchant for a weird tableau. Key to it all is US actor Dannheisser as Teyve. He beautifully underplays it with a bearish dignity and put-upon stoicism. The air of dark absurdity is aided by a wonderfully evocative set from Tom Scutt. It’s unlikely to be a definitive take, but it is a brilliant one.

  • Film
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

This thriller ‘from the world of John Wick’ has been a long time in the making. Happily, it emerges with enough inventive action to stand alongside its murderous predecessors, and makes Ana de Armas into a likeable assassin hero. She plays Eve, a girl orphaned by Gabriel Byrne’s Chancellor and raised in a ballet school-stroke-assassin training academy. She has vengeance in mind and Keanu Reeves’ John Wick is pressed into action to stop her. Both de Armas and Reeves make convincing ass-kickers. 

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Love sushi, dumplings or noodles? Inamo’s got you covered. This high-tech spot in Soho or Covent Garden lets you order from interactive tabletops, play over 20 games while you wait and even doodle on your table. Then it’s all you can eat pan-Asian dishes like Sichuan chicken, red dragon rolls and Korean wings with bottomless drinks. Usually £113.35, now just £33 or £26 if you're in early at the weekend!


Get Inamo’s best ever bottomless food & drink brunch from only £26 with Time Out Offers.

  • Things to do
  • Festivals
  • Soho

Think clowning is a dying art that’s limited to circus big tops? The London Clown Festival will make you think again. The event returns for another year in its biggest incarnation yet, with an eclectic line-up of British and European clown work that will run at first Soho Theatre and then on to Jacksons Lane for the last few shows. As you might imagine, it’s a thoroughly contemporary affair that won’t simply consist of people dressed like Ronald McDonald squirting flowers at each other: shows vary from Sasha Krohn’s elegant The Weight of the Shadow – a piece that examines the turmoil of a psychiatric patient over a single day – to monstrous bouffon Red Bastard, in his first London dates in eight years.

For full listings, go to the official Clown Festival website

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  • Musicals
  • Sloane Square
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Breach Theatre’s verbatim musical about Section 28 – the heinous legislation introduced in the late ’80s to prevent the ‘promotion’ of homosexuality in schools – is funnier, sharper and more damning than ever before at this Royal Court Theatre run. Co-writers Ellice Stevens and Billy Barrett have shaped the testimony of teachers, activists and students into songs drawing on the stylings of New Wave and electronica. It goes big to puncture the poisonous balloon parade of politicians, pundits and homophobic media outlets who created Section 28 and there are devastating testimonies of teenagers and teachers whose lives were – in some cases – permanently harmed by the aftermath of Section 28. It recreates the joyful defiance of the fierce love of community.

  • Things to do
  • Festivals
  • London

Founded during the Arab Spring in 2011, biennial festival Shubbak has become one of London’s largest celebrations of contemporary Arab and South West Asian & North African (SWANA) culture. The 2025 edition of Shubbak features a plethora of performances, exhibitions and community-driven events scheduled over three weeks across many venues. This year, see fashion catwalks, the largest Palestinian theatre production staged in the UK for 25 years, as well as 40+ events encompassing theatre, film, music, dance, spoken word and experimental arts. 

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  • Music
  • Barbican

Where would London’s music scene be without pirate radio? To celebrate the radical influence of pirate radio that still impacts London’s music scene today, the Barbican is putting on a month-long programme of broadcasts, talks, workshops, club nights and screenings that will explore the history and impact of community radio, and Black British music. Highlights from the programme include musical sessions and parties, a month-long residency by Reprezent Radio, a one-off club night hosted by Rinse FM at the Barbican’s ClubStage, screenings of archive films and panel talks.

  • Art
  • Camberwell

Chaotic explosions of wood, scrap metal and cotton cascade through the gallery in the work of Brooklyn-based artist Leonardo Drew. Known for using found natural materials that are oxidised, burned, and left to decay, Drew creates visceral, large-scale installations that reflect on the cyclical nature of existence. His sculptures evoke the scars of America’s industrial past, while also suggesting forces beyond human control. At the South London Gallery in London, Drew will unveil a new site-specific work that engulfs the walls and floor of the main space, with fragmented wood appearing as if battered by extreme weather, natural disasters, or what he calls ‘acts of God.’

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  • Drama
  • Charing Cross Road
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

For a script penned in 1893, Mrs Warren’s Profession still feels remarkably fresh. The attitude of George Bernard Shaw’s play towards sex work as a functioning product of the capitalist labour market feels bracingly current even today. Yet at first glance, director Dominic Cooke’s production is as traditional as they come, but something darker bubbles beneath the surface. Imelda Staunton plays the titular Mrs Warren who draws the eye from the moment she strides onto stage in her striped frock coat. There is subtle pain in her voice when she talks about the circumstances that led her to her profession. You don’t leave with clear answers about Mrs Warren or even her profession, but you will leave unexpectedly entertained. 

  • Things to do
  • Barbican

From screeching tube carriages to the lulling podcast we listen to on our commute, noise is constantly shaping our lives, and the Barbican’s Feel the Sound exhibition promises to be a multi-sensory journey into our personal relationship with sound. Eleven commissions and installations will take over the arts centre, all exposing visitors to frequencies, sound, rhythmic patterns and vibrations that define everything around us. Even the Centre’s underground car parks will be part of the action as it’s transformed into a club space. Sing with a digital quantum choir, experience music without sound and look out for experiences celebrating underground club culture. 

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  • Comedy
  • Covent Garden
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Mischief Theatre – they of The Play That Goes Wrong – are now aiming their slick brand of ever-escalating theatrical farce at the spy genre in this West End premiere. When a top-secret file is stolen by a turncoat British agent, a deeply mismatched pair of KGB agents and a CIA operative and his over-enthusiastic mother collide in pursuit of it. General chaos ensues. Writers Henry Shields and Henry Lewis mine plenty of daft comedy from spy staples like bugged radios and improbable gadgets while paying homage to a decade in the UK rocked by the revelations of double agent Soviet Union spy rings. A talented cast know their mission, steering into every eccentricity in the play’s helium-filled parade of stereotypes. For bungling wit matched with peerless physical comedy, you’d be hard pressed to find better in the West End.

Grab yourself a front row seat at Vogue: Inventing the Runway, the stylish new immersive experience at Lightroom, exploring how the iconic fashion mag shaped the runway as we know it. Curated by Edward Enninful OBE and narrated by Kate Moss, this visually stunning show takes you behind the scenes of haute couture history.

Get adult tickets for £19 (down from £25) and student tickets for £10 only with Time Out Offers.

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  • Art
  • Art

The National Gallery’s Sainsbury Wing is finally open again after being closed for refurbishment for two years. And what a relief that is, because the Sainsbury Wing housed some of London’s greatest art treasures. It was there that you could find gleaming, golden, Byzantine altarpieces and early Renaissance masterpieces. The refurbished wing will allow visitors to gaze adoringly at Piero della Francesca’s ‘Baptism of Christ’, their earliest painting, in a specially designed chapel-like room. There’ll also be Paolo Uccello’s ‘The Battle of San Romano’ returning from its three-year restoration process, and a whole room dedicated to the theme of gold.

  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • South Kensington

The Natural History Museum always has fun with its big, slick exhibitions: for 2025 it poses one of the big questions of our times – are we alone out there? Could Life Exist Beyond Earth? won’t be getting bogged down in what aliens might want from us, but it will be focussing on the geological side of space: the NHM’s collections contain some of the world’s most important space rocks, many of which will be on display here. Snap a selfie with a piece of Mars, touch a fragment of the Moon and lay your hands on the Allende meteorite, which is, remarkably, older than Earth itself. Listen to the sounds of Mars and smell the smells of outer space.

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Imagine indulging in all the dumplings, rolls, and buns you can handle, crafted by a Chinatown favourite with over a decade of culinary excellence. Savour Taiwanese pork buns, savoury pork and prawn soup dumplings, and luxurious crab meat xiao long bao. To top it off, enjoy a chilled glass of prosecco to elevate your feast. Cheers to a truly delightful dining experience at Leong’s Legend!

Indulge in unlimited dim sum at this iconic Chinatown dining spot, from just £24.95! Buy now with Time Out Offers.
  • Shakespeare
  • South Bank
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Doing something genuinely original with Romeo and Juliet is no mean feat, but Sean Holmes’s latest Globe version transposes fair Verona to the rootin’ tootin’ American West, the cast donning stetsons and petticoats befitting a trad production of Oklahoma! as the sighs of our star-cross’d lovers are scored by a banjo and intercut with the odd ‘yee-haw!’ This Romeo and Juliet is remarkably unafraid to have fun. The Western theme is wrung tightly to eke out every last drop of comic potential. You have to admire the Globe’s commitment to doing something different. 

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Treat yourself to a Mediterranean feast in the heart of Soho at Maresco, where Scottish seafood meets bold Spanish flavours. With this exclusive deal, you’ll get two courses, house sourdough and a glass of wine for under 20 quid – a serious steal in central London. Whether you're craving jamón ibérico, fresh octopus or rich paella, this buzzing spot brings sunshine to your plate without breaking the bank.

Get two courses with sourdough and wine, for £19.95 (originally £31), only with Time Out Offers.

  • Art
  • Bankside
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

The home, migration, global displacement: these are all themes Do Ho Suh explores in his work, consisting of videos, drawings, and large translucent fabric installations of interiors, objects, walls and architectural structures. Often brightly coloured, skeletal and encompassing, this survey exhibition at Tate Modern will showcase three decades the celebrated Korean-born, London-based artist, including brand-new, site-specific works on display. 

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  • Art
  • Masterpiece
  • Bloomsbury

Japan’s Edo period – from 1603 to 1868 – is thought to have been mostly a time of civic peace and development, allowing new art forms to flourish. In the later part of that era, Utagawa Hiroshige produced thousands of prints capturing the landscape, nature and daily life and became one of the country’s most celebrated artists. This new exhibition at the British Museum offers a rare chance to see his never-before-seen works up close (this is the first exhibition of his work in London for a quarter of a century), spanning Hiroshige’s 40-year career via prints, paintings, books and sketches.

  • Art
  • Bankside

Leigh Bowery was a convention-shunning icon of 1980s London nightlife, taking on many different roles in the city’s scene, from artist, performer and model, to club promoter, fashion designer and musician. His artistry also took many shapes, from reimagining clothes and makeup to experimenting with painting and sculpture. A new Tate Modern exhibition will celebrate his life and work, displaying some of his looks and collaborations with the likes of Charles Atlas, Lucian Freud, Nicola Rainbird and more.

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★★★★ 'Frameless has managed to create something genuinely exciting' - Time Out

Escape reality through maximum immersion and experience 42 masterpieces from 29 of the world’s most iconic artists, each reimagined beyond belief, through cutting-edge technology. Situated in Marble Arch, Frameless plays host to four unique galleries with hypnotic visuals and a dazzling score. Enjoy 90 minutes of surreal artwork from Bosch, Dalí and more for just £24!

Get £24.80 tickets (originally £31) to Frameless, only with Time Out Offers.

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